INTRODUCTION TO MEDITATION (HOW WE PRACTICE) sactoinsight.org

Page 79

GUIDED MEDITATION VIII: WALKING MEDITATION The Buddha described four standard postures in which one can practice meditation: walking, standing, sitting, and lying down. In addition to formal sitting meditation practice, many people benefit from walking meditation. This is a formal practice where mindfulness is brought to the act of walking. This can be done any time we are walking and is especially useful if there is a regular period during the day when one walks (i.e., during the commute to work). It can also be practiced as part of one‟s daily meditation practice. To begin, find an area of level ground of about 20 paces where you can walk back and forth. As with the sitting meditation, during walking meditation you want to create conditions that will optimize your ability to be mindful. For your walking path do not choose a path with a lot of distractions or traffic. Walking back and forth is better than strolling, which can lead you to be distracted by all the sights and sounds that you encounter. Start at one end of the path. Begin by closing the eyes and placing the attention on the body standing. Notice if there is any tension or holding and see if you can release it and relax. Create an alert but relaxed posture. Allow the breath to find a natural rhythm and depth. During walking meditation, instead of using the breath as the anchor of your awareness, use the sensations of the legs moving or the contact of the bottoms of the feet with the ground. Before walking, set the intention to be mindful of the physical sensations of walking. Begin walking. Notice the sensations of walking in the legs and/or feet. As with breath meditation, when the mind wanders notice that it has left the object of meditation, and without agitation or

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INDEX

4min
pages 131-134

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

2min
pages 127-130

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

1min
page 125

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

0
page 126

APPENDIX 1: QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

9min
pages 114-120

PRACTICE

2min
pages 109-111

CONCLUSION

1min
pages 112-113

MEDITATION COURSES

1min
page 108

MEDITATION RETREATS

1min
page 107

SKILLFUL INTENTION

1min
pages 99-100

BUDDHISM

2min
pages 105-106

LOVINGKINDNESS (METTA

2min
pages 101-102

GUIDED MEDITATION X: LOVINGKINDNESS

2min
pages 103-104

DHAMMA STUDY

0
page 98

INSIGHT INTO 3 CHARACTERISTICS

1min
pages 96-97

KAMMA

2min
pages 94-95

THE 4 NOBLE TRUTHS

8min
pages 88-93

SKILLFUL CONCENTRATION

1min
pages 81-82

SKILLFUL VIEW

0
page 87

3. TRAINING IN WISDOM

2min
pages 85-86

CONCENTRATION

1min
pages 83-84

MEDITATION

0
page 78

MEDITATION

2min
pages 79-80

GUIDED MEDITATION VI: DHAMMAS

1min
pages 76-77

THE 7 FACTORS OF AWAKENING

1min
pages 74-75

THE SIX SENSE-BASES

1min
page 73

THE 5 AGGREGATES OF CLINGING

2min
pages 71-72

DHAMMAS

0
page 64

THE 5 HINDRANCES

4min
pages 67-70

MIND STATES

2min
pages 60-62

GUIDED MEDITATION V: MIND STATE

1min
page 63

GUIDED MEDITATION IV: FEELING TONES

1min
page 59

FEELING TONES

1min
pages 57-58

THE BREATH

1min
pages 46-47

GUIDED MEDITATION I: THE BREATH

5min
pages 48-51

GUIDED MEDITATION III: THE BODY SCAN

4min
pages 54-56

SKILLFUL MINDFULNESS

2min
pages 42-43

GUIDED MEDITATION II: THE BODY

1min
pages 52-53

THE BODY

2min
pages 44-45

SKILLFUL EFFORT

2min
pages 40-41

2. TRAINING IN CONCENTRATION

0
page 39

FAITH AND THE 3 REFUGES

2min
pages 37-38

SKILLFUL LIVELIHOOD

1min
pages 28-29

Table 1: The Three Trainings/The Noble Eightfold Path

0
page 20

GENEROSITY AND RENUNCIATION

3min
pages 30-32

1. TRAINING IN ETHICAL CONDUCT

8min
pages 21-27

THE 3 TRAININGS

1min
pages 18-19

WHY MEDITATE?

1min
pages 16-17

ADDITIONAL PRACTICE SUPPORTS

4min
pages 33-36

INTRODUCTION

4min
pages 12-15
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